• AR-Sen: The news that the guy who held Blanche Lincoln to within about 10 points last time (in 2004) is getting back in the race this year seems like it should be a bigger news story than it is, but there’s an already filled-to-capacity GOP field and the establishment seems to have already picked favorites. At any rate, former state Sen. Jim Holt, closely linked with the state’s religious right, officially launched his bid today.
• AZ-Sen: It’s look more and more like ex-Rep. J.D. Hayworth is serious about pursuing a Republican primary challenge to John McCain and not just looking to fundraise his way out of some lingering legal debts. He’s been contacting consultants and pollsters about strategy, and he’s also made some high-profile appearances recently, including headlining a fundraiser for controversial Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio. In response to the possible challenge, John McCain is launching two different radio ads full of right-wing language pretty transparently aimed at the teabagging crowd, saying Barack Obama is “leading an extreme left-wing crusade” and calling himself “Arizona’s last line of defense.”
• CT-Sen: Let’s not get too far ahead of ourselves, but it’s looking likelier that starting in 2013, Richard Blumenthal will be Connecticut’s senior senator. PPP finds that Joe Lieberman’s numbers, not good before his HCR sabotage, have gotten even worse. His approval is a mind-blowing 14/81 among Democrats (probably ending any plans by him to seek the Democratic nomination in 2012). He fares least worst among Republicans, who give him a 39/48 approval; it’s good for a 25/67 approval over all, along with a 19/68 approval of his actions on health care (which pissed off Democrats while still leaving Republicans unhappy when he voted for final passage). While the Hill’s piece on Rep. Chris Murphy seems to be based mostly on a vague sentence by Murphy, it does point to a suddenly congealing CW that Murphy (with Blumenthal already engaged) will be the person to tackle Lieberman in 2012.
• FL-Sen, FL-Gov: You know you’re in trouble when you’re spending valuable time fighting rumors spread on Facebook by thoroughly discredited ex-Rep. Mark Foley. Charlie Crist today said there’s no truth to the rumors that he’s about to drop his faltering Senate primary bid and try for re-election as Governor instead.
• IL-Sen: Patrick Hughes, who’s been seeding his right-wing insurgent bid with some of his own money, is seeking to break out of the single digits in the GOP primary polls against Rep. Mark Kirk by upping his name recognition. He’s out with a TV spot today.
• MA-Sen: Martha Coakley is shifting her sleepy general election campaign into overdrive today with the special election several weeks away, launching her first general election TV ad. She’s also receiving the endorsements today of most of the key figures in the Kennedy clan, including Ted’s widow Vicky and ex-Rep. Joe (along with honorary Kennedy and temporary Senator Paul Kirk).
• ND-Sen: As we parse the comments from various potential Democratic candidates in the newly-open Senate race in North Dakota, it sounds like former AG Heidi Heitkamp is “very interested” and “very much looking into” the race, while talk show host Ed Schultz is “at this point… not even considering.”
• NY-Sen-B: Here’s an interesting possibility surfacing, as the GOP seeks anyone who’s willing to take on Kirsten Gillibrand in the Senate race: ex-Rep. Susan Molinari, who was considered a rising star back when she represented NY-13. She’s started floating her name out there (or more accurately, her dad, Staten Island GOP leader Guy Molinari), but one key point from the article is that Molinari — currently employed at the firm of Bracewell & Giuliani (yes, that Giuliani) — “left Congress in 1997 and currently lives in Virginia.” Meanwhile, as the potential Harold Ford Jr. candidacy is still the “wtf?” heard ’round the blogosphere, The Albany Project takes a deeper look at the mysterious forces pushing the idea front and center.
• IL-Gov: Desperately needing to make up some ground on incumbent Gov. Pat Quinn in the last month before the Democratic primary, Comptroller Dan Hynes is going hard negative against Quinn from the apparent right in a new TV spot, painting him as a soft-on-crime tax-raiser. Meanwhile, Quinn got the endorsement from the Chicago Sun-Times.
• MA-Gov: State Treasurer Tim Cahill’s independent candidacy for Governor hasn’t really seemed to have its desired effect for Cahill, as it mostly has allowed Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick to move ahead in the polls as Cahill splits the anti-Patrick votes. Cahill looks to be trying to lure some more GOP voters into his camp to become the definitive anti-Patrick candidate, though, with his running mate pick, GOP former state Rep. Paul Loscocco. It doesn’t sound like Cahill or Loscocco are very enthuasiastic about taking each other to the prom, though; Cahill already got turned down by four previous people he’d asked to be his running mate (including current Senate candidate Scott Brown), and Loscocco had previously been lobbying to be GOP candidate Charlie Baker’s running mate but missed the cut on that one.
• MD-Gov: Incumbent Gov. Martin O’Malley seems to have a fairly clear path to re-election, but for the time being he has higher-profile opposition in his own primary than from the Republicans. He’s facing a challenge from the right from George Owings, who officially launched today. Owings was a conservative Democratic state Delegate for many years and then picked by GOP Governor Bob Ehrlich as the state’s veteran affairs secretary (who was then sacked by O’Malley once he took office); Owings is attacking O’Malley’s tax raising and opposition to the death penalty.
• NE-Gov: Democrats are back to square one in the Nebraska gubernatorial race against GOP incumbent Dave Heineman, after Douglas Co. Commissioner (and former Omaha mayor) Mike Boyle — who’d sounded likely to run last month — decided against a bid. Democratic state Sen. Steve Lathrop has also ruled the race out.
• CO-03: Martin Beeson, the Republican DA for an agglomeration of small mountain counties, has pulled out of his bid for the GOP nod in the 3rd to challenge Rep. John Salazar. Beeson’s hopes dimmed when state Rep. (and 2006 loser) Scott Tipton got into the GOP field a few months ago.
• IL-10: Moderate Republican state Rep. Beth Coulson got a big (if unsurprising) endorsement, from fellow GOP moderate ex-Rep. John Porter. Porter held the seat for 20 years, until he made way for his former chief of staff (current Rep. Mark Kirk) in 2000.
• MN-01: Apparently John Wade, the president of Rochester’s Chamber of Commerce, had been interested in a run in the 1st against Democratic sophomore Rep. Tim Walz. He just decided against it, although a lone business conservative seems like he might have a shot at winning the crowded GOP primary, split between a number of loudmouthed social conservatives (most notably ex-state Rep. Allen Quist).
• MS-01: Good fundraising has propelled Republican state Sen. Alan Nunnelee up a tier in the NRCC’s framework for challengers. Nunnelee, who’ll likely face off against Rep. Travis Childers and his mighty ‘stache, is now a “Contender.”
• TN-06: Democrats are having trouble recruiting to fill the slot left behind by Rep. Bart Gordon’s retirement. State Rep. Henry Fincher just said no; he follows fellow state Rep. Mike McDonald in declining. It can’t be that appetizing, given the district’s reddening hue, several strong GOPers waiting in the wings, and the likelihood of GOP gerrymandering making the district even less hospitable in 2012.
• UT-03, UT-Sen: I’d be surprised if anyone were on pins and needles about this, but if you missed yesterday’s announcement, yes, Rep. Jason Chaffetz will be returning for another term in the House rather than getting into the primary against impermissibily sane GOP Sen. Bob Bennett.
• EMILY’s List: Stephanie Shriock, chief of staff to Sen. Jon Tester, will take over as head of EMILY’s List from Ellen Malcolm. It marks the first change in leadership at the top for the prolific PAC.
• RNC: After a revolt by what remains of its moderate wing, the RNC has backed down on its purity test (which would require 8 of 10 agreements on right-wing positions, and probably would have cut loose Mike Castle, Mark Kirk, Rob Simmons, and Charlie Crist loose from RNC funding). Now they’re simply requiring that nobody endorse any Democratic candidates in 2010. Meanwhile, Michael Steele continues to overshadow the rest of the RNC’s operations with his gift of saying odd things, with today’s installment a riposte to intraparty critics intent on withholding RNC donations because of Steele’s leadership: “get a life” or “fire me.”
• Gay marriage: It’s been flying under the radar with everything else going on this week, but New Jersey’s state Senate is currently debating gay marriage, with a vote possibly later today. Only 13 Senators have definitely committed to it so far though, short of the 21 needed for passage. (Dems are already short 1 vote with the absence of Dana Redd, who resigned after becoming mayor of Camden.)
• Census: Here’s an interesting conundrum for the Census Bureau — how to deal with the issue of the nation’s legions of sunbirds: retirees who live in the south for winter and the north for summer. It’s especially an issue for Minnesota as it seeks to stave off elimination of one of its Congressional districts, and it’s making special efforts to make sure long-term travelers list themselves according to their Minnesota addresses.
She’s pro-choice, pro-civil union, and she famously voted “yes” on Clinton’s Family and Medical Leave Act of ’93. She could just as easily be Scozzafava-ed.
He’s still young, and he could possibly run for both Senate seats up in 2012 and 2016, because I don’t think Hatch and Bennett would stick around for another term due to their age (Hatch will be 78 in 2012 and Bennett will be 83 in 2016).
CQ had a post I somehow missed yesterday about Tom Perriello's office releasing a big 85-page report that, among other things, lists in exhaustive detail the various events and services Perriello and his staff have organized or provided in the 5th. The pdf is worth a read, and I hope his campaign manages to effectively hit on the points it raises about job creation and retention in particular.
I’m trying to figure who is still out there that is yet to declare their intent to file for re-election.
I got the following as still unconfirmed in what would be competitive seats:
VA-9: Boucher
OR-4: DeFazio (Gov run?)
WV-1: Mollohan
WV-3: Rahall
Who else is still to confirm they are coming back in 2010?
Shriock also ran Franken’s campaign — there was an interesting piece on her last year. (She took a leave of absence as Tester’s chief of staff.) Interesting! I wonder if this will lead to her taking a stab at office herself down the road.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/…
out in PA.
Nothing against Chris Murphy, but if his gubenatorial bid doesn’t pan out isn’t it possible that Ned Lamont would make another run for the Senate in 2012?
With all the skeletons in her closet you’d be better off just running her sucessor Vito.
The connecticut gov numbers coming out tommorrow and that is the conclusion. They are not releasing any of the numbers they had for the primaries because with all the big news this week they only got a sample of 250 and they decided that the margin of error was too huge to be accurate. Looks like PPP learned their lesson from NY-23. I still want to see if McMahon has a chance at beating Simmons in the primary.
which was taken mostly before Dorgan’s retirement showed him being slaughtered by Hoeven by 17 points despite having a 63% favorability rating.
Sorta takes the sails out of the “Dorgan retired because he was betrayed” crap
http://www.dailykos.com/story/…
Dorgan retired because he was warned that Hoeven was getting in and he was going to lose. Thats all there is to it. I really can’t blame the guy for doing it.
Not sure who was the additional vote besides the 13 publicly committed ones. And why don’t they at least have a roll call like in New York? I thought the point of the vote was to get each senator on the record as supporting or opposing equality.
Now I see part of why my mother was so excited to leave New Jersey. (Too bad she lives in Rhode Island now which isn’t much better)
http://www.miamiherald.com/new…
Alex Sink (D, FL-Gov) – $1.1m raised, $4.3m on hand
Bill McCollum (R, FL-Gov) – $1.5m raised, cash on hand total not
available (but only $3.3m raised total)
http://www.bizjournals.com/mil…
Tom Barrett (D, WI-Gov) – $750k raised, $1.5m on hand
http://www2.journalnow.com/con…
Cal Cunningham (D, NC-Sen) – $320k raised
http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-…
Armando Gutierrez (R, FL-08) – $310k raised (includes $100k self-funding)
http://blogs.cqpolitics.com/ey…
http://blogs.cqpolitics.com/ey…
Randy Altschuler (R, NY-01) – ~$200k raised, $776k on hand (he
self-funded $450k in 3Q)
George Demos (R, NY-01) – >$300k raised, $275k on hand
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/l…
“Started our Massachusetts poll tonight…looks like it might be a real race”-PPP’s twitter page
The Department of Justice has impaneled a grand jury to look into allegations of abuse of power by the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office, according to subpoenas sent to at least two county officials.
http://www.azcentral.com/12news/
http://www.baltimoresun.com/ne…
City Council President Stephanie Rawlings-Blake will take over as mayor once Dixon resigns on February 4.
from Kevin McCarthy:
“You get enough people on their surfboards, you send them in the right direction and see how many can get to shore,” said Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), who is in charge of candidate recruitment. “If the wave is big enough, we get there. But if you don’t have them out there and you see the wave coming, it takes too long to paddle and try to turn around and catch it, so you’ve gotta be prepared.”
He must have worked on that metaphor for months!
http://blogs.cqpolitics.com/ey…
This is irrelevant news, as we know from our colleague here at SSP that Boucher, who has been in office since the early 80’s and has typically won by huge margins, will be destroyed by even third-tier Republican competition. I’m sure Kilgore weighed the certainty of Boucher’s defeat into his decision not to run.
http://www.nydailynews.com/blo…
http://publicpolicypolling.blo…
What the hell are they playing at? And no sign of doing anything about it.